The English Lake District.
Actually found this:Coniston is a beautiful place in the Lake District in the U.KMost notably coniston water. It was the scene for many attempts at the water speed record in the 1960'sA site I found when googling was www.coniston.comBest page would be http://coniston.com/the_lake_district.html , goes into more detail about the Lake and the world water speed records
Its not possible to follow road way since continents are different. I would suggest that u take a flight. Otherwise you would have to change multiple travel modes
The answer would be yes because how would the water get there in the first place? The water would have to evaporate to be able to get into the air. And evaporated water is water vapor no?
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There are two places where Earth's water would stay when there is no water cycle. If there was no evaporation, water would just stay in the water bodies permanently. If there was no condensation, water would be in the clouds and the atmosphere as water vapour.
Water would be a compound.
Water would be a compound.
The water would not have recycled back. It would have caused scarcity of water.
The water would have the same density anywhere it is.
My bet would be the hot water heater cycling water through
I would imagine that the sea water would have to run through a water purifier.
salt water would kill it it would dehydrate it and then it would need more water than usual.